1.Oral and Human Microbiome Research
Journal of Dental Hygiene Science 2019;19(2):77-85
In the past gut microbiome has been the main focus of microbiome research. Studies about the microbiome inside oral cavities and other organs are underway. Studies about the relationship between noninfectious diseases and periodontal diseases, and the negative effects of harmful oral microbes on systemic health have been published in the recent past. A lot of attention is being paid towards fostering a healthy oral microbial ecosystem. This study aimed to understand the roles and effects of the microbiome inside the human body can potentially help cure various diseases including inflammatory bowel diseases with no known cure such as Crohn's disease, atopic dermatitis, obesity, cancer, diabetes, brain diseases and oral diseases. The present study examined technological trends in the correlation between the human microbiome and diseases in the human body, interactions between the human body's immunity, the metabolic system, and the microbiome, and research trends in other countries. While it has been proven that human microbiome is closely correlated with human diseases, most studies are still in the early stage of trying to compare the composition of microbiomes between health and patient groups. Since the oral environment is a dynamic environment that changes due to not only food intake but also other external factors such as lifestyle, hygiene, and drug intake, it is necessary to continue in-depth research on the microbiome composition characteristics to understand the complex functions of oral microorganisms. Analyzing the oral microbiome using computational technology may aid in disease diagnosis and prevention.
Brain Diseases
;
Crohn Disease
;
Dermatitis, Atopic
;
Diagnosis
;
Eating
;
Ecosystem
;
Foster Home Care
;
Gastrointestinal Microbiome
;
Human Body
;
Humans
;
Hygiene
;
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
;
Life Style
;
Metagenome
;
Microbiota
;
Obesity
;
Periodontal Diseases
2.Exploring How to Conduct Infection Prevention and Control Education in Undergraduate Nursing Programs in Korea: Focus Group Interview Analysis
Sung Ok CHANG ; Kyeong Yae SOHNG ; Kyunghee KIM ; Jongsoon WON ; Min Jung CHOI ; Seung Kyo CHAUNG
Journal of Korean Academy of Fundamental Nursing 2019;26(3):210-220
PURPOSE: In the nursing profession, it is imperative that students are able to transfer their undergraduate knowledge and skills into practice to become competent nurses. The aim of this study was to illuminate how infection prevention and control (IPC) education would be conducted in undergraduate nursing programs. METHODS: A qualitative design utilizing focus group interviews as its data collection method was employed. Twelve professors from twelve South Korean universities that have undergraduate nursing programs were recruited as research participants and divided into two focus groups. RESULTS: Focus group interview analysis showed that IPC education in undergraduate nursing programs for fostering IPC competency was composed of two categories: a pre-clinical course and a clinical course. Each included three subcategories-education contents, education strategies, and considerations of how infection control is taught to students as they continue from beginning to advanced-and the themes of each subcategory were derived. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of this study can provide an overview of how nursing professors should teach IPC education to undergraduates. As IPC education for nurses is very important, more in-depth discussions that include educators, clinical mentors, and nursing students regarding IPC education are needed to ensure patients' safety in clinical settings.
Data Collection
;
Education
;
Focus Groups
;
Foster Home Care
;
Humans
;
Infection Control
;
Korea
;
Mentors
;
Nursing
;
Students, Nursing
3.Now and Future of Data Sharing : Brain Magnetic Resonance Imaging Repositories
Eun NAMGUNG ; Seunghee KIM ; Jaeuk HWANG
Journal of the Korean Society of Biological Therapies in Psychiatry 2019;25(1):13-27
Over the past decade, practice of sharing brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data is increasing given significance of reproducibility and transparency in human neuroscience. Larger multimodal brain MRI databases are needed for more robust research findings considering potential possibilities of large variability in human neuroscience. There are currently more than tens of thousands of shared brain MRI datasets across multiple conditions and hundreds of neuroimaging studies using multimodality through shared brain MRI data repositories. This article critically reviews aims, procedures, and current state of brain MRI data sharing. This review focuses on projects and research findings using structural and functional MRI open databases and is further divided into T1- and diffusion-weighted images for structural MRI as well as resting-state and task-based functional MRI. The challenges and directions are finally discussed. Advances in brain MRI data sharing will lead to more rapid progression in human neuroscience by fostering effective longitudinal, multi-site, multimodal neuroimaging research.
Brain
;
Dataset
;
Foster Home Care
;
Humans
;
Information Dissemination
;
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
;
Neuroimaging
;
Neurosciences
;
Transcutaneous Electric Nerve Stimulation
4.Vaccination for Athletes: Evidence and Recommendations
Bumjo OH ; Young Koo LEE ; Booyoon CHEUNG ; Kyung Tai LEE ; Chul Won HA
The Korean Journal of Sports Medicine 2019;37(1):1-10
As interest in sports rapidly grows in Korea, fostering of elite athletes and preservation of the athletic ability no longer became the task of advanced countries only. In that aspect, health of athletes and their associated coaches, athlete trainers, team members such as team doctors, and even their families is certainly a matter of concern. Especially when it comes to the inoculation of infectious disease prevention, it needs to be considered as one of the most economical and effective ways to promote health in sports people as well as elite athletes. The purpose of this article is to go over the specific circumstances of the athletes and related literatures on vaccination. In addition, we provide recommendations on the vaccination of athletes regarding the actual situation of sports in Korea.
Athletes
;
Communicable Diseases
;
Foster Home Care
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Sports
;
Vaccination
5.Perceptions of Contraception and Patterns of Switching Contraceptive Methods Among Family-planning Acceptors in West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia
Yuli AMRAN ; Narila Mutia NASIR ; Dini DACHLIA ; Fitra YELDA ; Budi UTOMO ; Iwan ARIAWAN ; Rita DAMAYANTI
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 2019;52(4):258-264
OBJECTIVES: The perceptions of family-planning (FP) acceptors regarding contraception influence the reasons for which they choose to switch their method of contraception. The objective of this study was to analyze the perceptions of contraception and rationales for switching contraceptive methods among female FP acceptors in West Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia. METHODS: This study involved the analysis of secondary data from the Improve Contraceptive Method Mix study, which was conducted in 2013 by the Center for Health Research, University of Indonesia. The design of the study was cross-sectional. We performed 3 stages of sampling using the cluster technique and selected 4819 women who were FP acceptors in West Nusa Tenggara Province, Indonesia as the subjects of this study. The data were analyzed using multiple logistic regression. RESULTS: The predominant pattern of switching contraceptive methods was switching from one non-long-term method of contraception to another. Only 31.0% of the acceptors reported a rational pattern of switching contraceptive methods given their age, number of children, and FP motivations. Perceptions of the side effects of contraceptive methods, the ease of contraceptive use, and the cost of the contraceptives were significantly associated (at the level of α=0.05) with rational patterns of switching contraceptive methods. CONCLUSIONS: Perceptions among FP-accepting women were found to play an important role in their patterns of switching contraceptive methods. Hence, fostering a better understanding of contraception through high-quality counseling is needed to improve perceptions and thereby to encourage rational, effective, and efficient contraceptive use.
Child
;
Contraception
;
Contraceptive Agents
;
Counseling
;
Family Planning Services
;
Female
;
Foster Home Care
;
Humans
;
Indonesia
;
Logistic Models
;
Methods
;
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
6.Burnout and mental health of physicians
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2019;62(7):346-348
The World Health Organization has included burnout in the 11th revision of the International Classification of Diseases as an occupational phenomenon that involves “factors influencing health status or contact with health services.” Burnout is a syndrome conceptualized as resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed. It manifests as exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced job satisfaction. In the United States, more than 50% of physicians have reported burnout, and their suicide rate is more than twice as high as that of the general population. Burnout in physicians is linked with increased irritability, depression, and medical errors in practice, and decreased job satisfaction, work efficacy, and concentration. Most physicians have pointed to administrative burdens outside of clinical practice as the major cause of burnout. To prevent physician burnout, regular evaluations of stress and self-awareness of one's burnout status are essential. Each physician should make proactive lifestyle changes to reduce job-related stress, such as regular exercise, seeking help, ensuring enough rest, and fostering good interpersonal relationships. Awareness and prevention of burnout are important not only for physicians' mental health, but also for patients' care.
Depersonalization
;
Depression
;
Foster Home Care
;
International Classification of Diseases
;
Job Satisfaction
;
Life Style
;
Medical Errors
;
Mental Health
;
Suicide
;
United States
;
World Health Organization
7.A Study on the Korean Medicine Education and the Changes in the Traditional Korean Medicine during the Japanese Colonial Era: Focused on the Korean Medicine Training Schools.
Korean Journal of Medical History 2018;27(1):1-48
The modern education institutes play an important role in fostering professional talents, reproducing knowledge and studies, and forming the identities of certain academic fields and vocational communities. It is a matter of common knowledge that the absence of an official Korean medicine medical school during the Japanese colonial era was a severely disadvantageous factor in the aspects of academic progress, fostering follow-up personnel, and establishment of social capability. Therefore, the then Korean medicine circle put emphasis on inadequate official education institutes as the main factor behind oppression. Furthermore, as the measure to promote the continuance of Korean medicine, the circle regarded establishing civilian Korean medicine training schools as their long-cherished wish and strived to accomplish the mission even after liberation. This study looked into how the Korean medicine circle during the Japanese colonial era utilized civilian training schools to conduct the Korean medicine education conforming to modern medical school and examined how the operation of these training schools influenced the changes in the traditional Korean medicine. After the introduction of the Western medical science, the Korean medicine circle aimed to improve the quality of Korean medicine doctors by establishing modern Korean medicine medical schools. However, after the annexation of Korea and Japan, official Korean medicine medical schools were not established since policies were organized centered on the Western medical science. In this light, the Korean medicine circle strived to nurture the younger generation of Korean medicine by establishing and operating the civilian Korean medicine training schools after the annexation between Korea and Japan. The schools were limited in terms of scale and status but possessed the forms conforming to the modern medical schools in terms of education system. In other words, the civilian training schools not only adhered to the standard education of Korean medicine but also aimed to lay their foundation in the education system of the Western medical science by forming the separated curriculum including basic medical science, diagnosis, clinic, drug, and the practice of acupuncture and moxibustion. Furthermore, having contained the basic subjects of the Western medical science - physiology, anatomy, pathology, etc. - in the compulsory subjects shows perceiving the intellectual and systematic hegemony of the Western medical science and satisfying the demand of the colonial power. Such an education system was succeeded and solidified through the training sessions and the training schools operated by the local colonial governments after the 1930s. Korean medicine became different from the traditional Korean medicine through the establishment and the operation of such training schools.
Academies and Institutes
;
Acupuncture
;
Aptitude
;
Asian Continental Ancestry Group*
;
Curriculum
;
Diagnosis
;
Education*
;
Follow-Up Studies
;
Foster Home Care
;
Humans
;
Japan
;
Korea
;
Moxibustion
;
Pathology
;
Physiology
;
Schools, Medical
8.Fostering critical thinking and collaborative learning skills among medical students through a research protocol writing activity in the curriculum.
Soumendra SAHOO ; Ciraj Ali MOHAMMED
Korean Journal of Medical Education 2018;30(2):109-118
PURPOSE: This intervention was aimed to analyse the effect of academic writing and journal critiquing as educational approaches in improving critical thinking and collaborative learning among undergraduate medical students. METHODS: A research proposal writing format was created for the 4th year medical students of Melaka Manipal Medical College, Malaysia during their ophthalmology clinical postings. The students worked in small groups and developed research protocols through an evidence based approach. This was followed by writing reflective summaries in academic portfolios about the activity undertaken. A mixed methods study was designed to explore the possible role of collaborative research proposal writing in enhancing critical thinking and collaborative learning. RESULTS: Analysis of reflections submitted by 188 medical students after the intervention indicate that majority of them found an improvement in their skills of critical thinking and collaborative learning as a result of research protocol writing. All participants agreed that the model helped in applying concepts to new situations in the form of designing their own study, which reflected in enhanced higher order cognitive skills. CONCLUSION: This study shows that the introduction of a structured module in the core medical curriculum that focuses on research writing skills embedded with collaborative and reflective practices can enhance collaborative learning, critical thinking, and reasoning among medical students.
Curriculum*
;
Foster Home Care*
;
Humans
;
Learning*
;
Malaysia
;
Ophthalmology
;
Research Design
;
Students, Medical*
;
Thinking*
;
Writing*
9.For the formation of a health community on the Korean Peninsula, inter-Korean cooperation should begin in the field of healthcare
Journal of the Korean Medical Association 2018;61(7):378-381
On April 27, 2018, a historic inter-Korean summit took place. Accordingly, the hostile confrontation that lasted for the past 70 years is over, and many exchanges of human resources and material between the two Koreas are expected. In this situation, I propose that the reasons for and methods of cooperation in healthcare between North and South Korea should be among the first issues to be considered. The reasons are as follows. First, as exchanges increase, the South and the North will rapidly develop into a single health community on the Korean peninsula. Second, cooperation in the field of healthcare can play a leading role in fostering a positive attitude among South and North Koreans toward the improvement of inter-Korean relations and the possibility of future unification. Third, the two Koreas have conditions that make them ideal partners for improving healthcare quality and systems in each country. Some suggestions for specific ways to do this are presented. First, an inter-Korean healthcare agreement should be concluded. Second, specific organizations for inter-Korean cooperation should be established and operated. Third, it is necessary to form and operate a ‘control tower’ for this process in South Korea. It is expected that cooperation between the two Koreas in the field of healthcare will eventually extend to cooperation in all areas.
Delivery of Health Care
;
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
;
Foster Home Care
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Quality of Health Care
10.Recognition and Propagation for Temple Food among University Students with Food-related Majors
Korean Journal of Community Nutrition 2018;23(2):137-147
OBJECTIVES: This study was conducted to investigate the perspective and popularization of temple food among university students with food related majors, and to provide basic data for the popularization and the fostering of professional lecture in temple food. METHODS: A self-administered questionnaire was applied to 453 university students at six universities with food related majors. The questionnaire was designed to examine interest, recognition, consumption, popularization and curriculum of temple food. RESULTS: The study population consisted of 19.2% men, and 80.8% women, and the most common response to desired career after graduation was food related employment (53.9%). Overall, 49.0% replied that they had an interest in temple food, which was relatively low. 59.9% of respondents who had been known throw TV, Internet, newspaper, and magazines about temple food were showed the highest results. Additionally, as for the perception of temple food, ‘Prevention of lifestyle related disease’ was the highest score (4.10). Overall, 64.9% of the subjects had not tried temple food, and 84.7% of these responded that this was because they had not encountered temple food. Among subjects who had tried temple food, most had encountered it at a temple (73.0%), and 78.0% replied that the taste of temple food was suitable. The intention to try temple food was 73.3%, and 64.8% of respondents said there was a necessity to establishment curriculum regarding temple food. Finally, interest, popularization, and intention to try temple food were significantly positively corelated. CONCLUSIONS: The results showed high interest in temple food and willingness to participate in education regarding temple food, as well as awareness of the need for popularization. Therefore, it is necessary to increase intake opportunities to raise interest in temple foods. This can be accomplished utilizing publicity materials, as well as by offering opportunities for temple food education through curriculum.
Curriculum
;
Education
;
Employment
;
Female
;
Foster Home Care
;
Humans
;
Intention
;
Internet
;
Life Style
;
Male
;
Periodicals as Topic
;
Surveys and Questionnaires

Result Analysis
Print
Save
E-mail